199 P. 440 | Mont. | 1921
prepared the opinion for the court.
This is an appeal from the judgment entered upon a verdict finding the defendant guilty of the crime of grand larceny and from the order of the court overruling the defend
The errors assigned relate to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict and to the action of the court in refusing instructions offered by the defendant, and also in giving certain instructions to the jury. The question relating to the sufficiency of the evidence has necessitated the critical examination of the entire record.
The state’s evidence tends to show that the animal described in the information was owned by Falkinburg, and was in Ms field on the twenty-ninth day of September, 1917; that he missed the animal on the following day, and in his search therefor met the defendant, and asked Mm if he had seen the animal, and the defendant answered, “No,” and asked Falkinburg if he had looked around the Y, meaning the Y track used by the railroad. Two days later defendant said to Lou Gridley in Bainville, where he was then working: “I got some beef out there. I killed a beef. There is some beef out there. It is getting warm and going to spoil, and you and Roy can have a quarter apiece.” Witness qualified his testimony by saying he was not positive that defendant used the words: “I killed a beef,” but he did say something to the effect that he had some beef out there. That evemng Gridley and defendant went to the Evans ranch, where they found the beef covered with weeds, in the bottom of a ravine several hundred feet from defendant’s house. They loaded three quarters on the car, but after going some distance one quarter was thrown off, because of the load being too heavy. One of the quarters taken was retained by Gridley, and the other was delivered to Roy Evans. Similar statements were made by defendant to Roy Evans, and also to Thomas Quinn, who went with defendant and got one quarter of the beef, wMch was in the same condition as that delivered to Gridley.
Herbert Ditmer, an auto driver, was then engaged to go with defendant. On their return defendant stated that someone had stolen the hide, but he brought back the head, which he recognized as the head of the Falkinburg steer. Ditmer testified: “When we got to the creek bottom, Evans got out, We walked to the north about two rods. We went into this creek bottom, and he showed me a little hole, and told me to uncover it, and I did. It seemed to be an old badger hole, about a foot wide and two feet long. It was covered with dry grass. When I uncovered it, I found the head of a black steer.” On the next day, defendant and Ditmer went back to the Evans ranch, and by direction of defendant Ditmer found one quarter of the beef covered with hay or weeds, and about one-half mile from where they found the head the day before. The deputy sheriff and Falkinburg then went to the Evans ranch, and found where the animal had been killed, found the entrails, and there found the hide stretched on the- ground, hair side up, and not covered or otherwise concealed.
Mrs. Falkinburg testified that on October 4, in a conversation relative to the steer, defendant said: “Don’t feel bad. I will give you a cow in place of it.” The defendant did not
The appellant refers to State v. Trosper, 41 Mont. 442, 109 Pac. 858, but we believe that case, and the authorities cited therein with approval, together with the decision in the Wülette Case, supra, sustain the position here taken.
The only manner in which this instruction differs from instruction No. 5 given by the court is that the proposed instruction contains the additional sentence: “There must be, in addition to proof of possession of stolen property, proof of corroborating circumstances,' tending of themselves to establish guilt.” In the beginning of the instruction, the court distinctly told the jury that the mere possession of stolen property, although unexplained by the defendant, was not of itself sufficient to justify conviction; hence it necessarily follows that before a jury, yielding obedience to this instruction, could return a verdict of guilty, there must be before it some evidence in addition to the evidence of possession, which tends to connect the defendant with the crime.
Defendant’s requested instruction No. 1 was merely the general instruction to the jury to acquit. All objections made by the appellant to the instruction given, and to those proposed and refused, have relation almost exclusively to the matter of the evidence, and we here again call attention to the Willette, Sparks, and Wilson Cases, supra.
We recommend that the judgment and order appealed from be affirmed.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, it is ordered that the judgment and order appealed from be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Rehearing denied 'July 6, 1921.